| Literature DB >> 32962415 |
Emanuela Filomena Legrottaglie1, Laura Balia1, Fabrizio Ivo Camesasca1, Jose Luis Vallejo-Garcia1, Giovanni Fossati1, Riccardo Vinciguerra2, Pietro Rosetta2, Paolo Vinciguerra1,3.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Spreading from China, COVID-19 pandemic reached Italy, the first massively involved western nation. At the beginning of March, 2020 in Northern Italy a complete lockdown of activities was imposed. Access to all healthcare providers, was halted for patients with elective problems. We present the management experience of the Humanitas Clinical and Research Center Ophthalmology Department in Rozzano, Milan, Italy, during the lockdown.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; corneal cross linking; intravitreal injections; keratoconus; lockdown; telephonic triage
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32962415 PMCID: PMC7511831 DOI: 10.1177/1120672120960334
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Ophthalmol ISSN: 1120-6721 Impact factor: 2.597
Cleaning and disinfection procedures.
| Before entering department | Investigation of COVID19 symptoms and contact with infected (in case of a risk patient, is requested to go home and call their family doctor) |
| Supply of surgical mask | |
| Evaluation of body temperature | |
| Hands disinfection with ethanol 70% gel | |
| Before entering visit lane | Health care workers’ tasks: |
| Environmental sanitation with ethanol 70% or sodium hypochlorite solutions | |
| Hands hygiene with ethanol 70% concentration gel or chlorhexidine gluconate 4% solution | |
| Change of nitrile gloves | |
| Medical examination | Patient’s hands disinfection with ethanol 70% concentration gel |
| Use of breath shield assembled on slit lamp |
Priority grading, SSN (National Health System) RAO classification.
| Priority | Scheduling time | Clinical conditions | Symptoms |
|---|---|---|---|
| U | Within 72 h | Ocular trauma, conjunctivitis, keratitis, uveitis | Acute visual loss or scotoma, amaurosis, endophthalmitis, acute glaucoma, new onset anisocoria, ocular inflammations (orbital cellulitis), acute ptosis, foreign body, phosphenes and floaters, acute diplopia, new onset monolateral exophthalmos, chemical and thermal burns, metamorphopsia |
| B | Within 10 days | Eyelid inflammatory disease, eyelid and orbital tumors | |
| D | Within 30 days | Glaucoma, diabetic retinopathy, chronic conjunctivitis, evaluation for starting/maintaining systemic therapies (e.g. hydroxychloroquine, corticosteroids, . . .) | |
| P | Longer period | Long-time loss of vision, pterygium, new diagnosis of diabetes or hypertension, familiarity for glaucoma and others hereditary ocular diseases | |
| Rescheduled visits |
U: urgent; B: less urgent; D: deferrable; P: programmable.
Figure 1.Flowchart summarizing services reorganization protocol based on electronic medical records review and phone calls to patients.
Figure 2.Graph showing the number of booked patients divided according to Subspecialty Services.
Figure 3.Graph showing the comparison between in-office activities, divided according to Subspecialty Services, during the lockdown period (March 9 - March 30, 2020) and the same period of 2019.
Priority patients identified, recalled and visited in the General Ophthalmology, Glaucoma, Retina and Cornea Services with related outcomes emerged during evaluations.
| General Ophthalmology ( | Glaucoma ( | Retina ( |
|---|---|---|
| 3 uveitis | 2 worsened visual fields | 1 wet AMD |
| 1 retinal detachment | 2 patients requiring a | 2 myopic maculopathies, |
| 4 conjunctivitis | variation of topical therapy | 5 retinal ruptures that needed of barrages laser |
| 2 retinal peripheral holes with indication for laser barrage | 2 patients requiring iridotomy | 1 emovitreous, |
| 1 pupillary block caused by PDMS (10 years before surgery) | ||
| 1 iridotomy for low anterior chamber with risk of occlusion | 2 significant RNFL reduction on OCT | 1 epiretinal membrane with loss of vision |
| 8 posterior vitreous detachments, one of these with hemorrhage | 4 patients with ischemic retinal areas who completed argon laser (PRP) | |
| 1 exposed ocular prosthesis in an enucleated patient who required surgery | 1 corioretinal sierous central treated | |
| 50 PRP and macular grid in 31 diabetic patients | ||
| Cornea | ||
| Priority (B, | Outcome | |
| 1. Young keratoconic patients not treated with CXL | 1a. Young keratoconic patients with significative progression, amenable of CXL in one eye ( | |
| 1b. Young keratoconic patients without significative progression, to be controlled ( | ||
| 2. Keratoconic patients previously treated with CXL with suspect of ectasia relapse | 2. Keratoconic patients previously treated with CXL, without progression ( | |
| 3. Patients transplanted in one eye only with controlateral eye disease | 3a. Bullous keratopathy in list for DMEK ( | |
| 3b. Corneal leucoma in list for SCTK ( | ||
| 3c. Adenovirus keratitis ( | ||
| 4. Patients with recent onset of astigmatism (young patients with keratoconus familiarity and patients with history of refractive surgery) | 4. Patients with recent astigmatism without ectasia ( | |
CXL: corneal cross-linking; DMEK: Descemet membrane endothelial keratoplasty; SCTK: sequential customized therapeutic keratectomy.